Possibly the most meta speaker on the TED stage is Lior Zoref. He had a dream: to speak at TED. He shows a video of himself saying to his friend that he wanted to do that, and his best friend telling him it was impossible. But his Facebook and twitter friends encouraged him. He wanted to give a talk on the wisdom of crowds. So, he’s giving the first ever crowd sourced TEDTalk, and he asked his online friends for help.

One suggestion came from a 16 year old, named Or Sagy: have the audience recreate a classic experiment in the widsom of crowds. Have people estimate the weight of an ox. Each guess will be wildly off, but the average will be remarkably close. To do this, he brings a live ox on stage.

No, really. There is a live ox on stage.

(echos of “Oh my god” and “No fricking way” around the room.)

Zoref asks the audience to guess the weight (using, of course a nifty website). Results to come later in the talk.

Now, if using crowd wisdom worked for companies, why couldn’t it work for his life? In that spirit, he posted the talk on wikipedia and solicited advice from his friends on Facebook and Twitter and elsewhere. And he met several people doing similar things.

Kai Busman is a pastor who uses crowd wisdom to create his Sunday sermons. Every week he asks what he should talk about and writes his sermon from that. Durring the service, people use phones to share understanding in real time. Church is full every Sunday.

Francine is raising her son using crowd wisdom on a daily basis, and said that she feels as if “super-nanny” is helping her.

“Is this the best crowd wisdom has to offer?” One of Zoref, and everyone’s, deepest fear is a child being sick. Deborah‘s child had a fever and rash, so she took photo and posted on Facebook. After one hour, three people said he might have Kawasaki disease. Crowd wisdom saved his life.

These people are, “Thinking with their friends. They all say they feel as if their brains have been upgraded.”

“Do you want to upgrade your brain?” asks Zoref. Here’s how you do it: You need a big crowd. You need a healthy digital relationship with your crowd. You can’t just ask questions, you need to give value, listen, respond — tell people they matter.

One of his friends though this means there’s something new. At TED we get inspired by the best speakers, but each is created by one, shared to many. It’s possible now to give a talk created by many, presented by one to many. We are entering the phase of mind-sharing. “The entire human race connected through social networks, and creating a master-mind.”

How good does the the mind of that crowd do? There were 500 estimates, and the results were:

-The lowest guess was 308 lbs.

-The highest was more than 8000 pounds.

-The average was 1792 pounds.

And the real weight? The ox weighs 1795 pounds. Three pounds off. Zoref hopes we’ll use crowd wisdom, not just for thinking, but to make our dreams come true, and he ends his talk with a line read by his online friends:

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Comments (35)

Why can we not do something like this to solve the dispute in the Middle East? The Israelis and the Palestinians are trapped in their own drama, pain, and conflict. Both peoples share the common ancestor of Abraham. They are cousins and it is breaking our collective hearts that this horrible conflict lingers in this sacred place. There has got to be a way that the “wisdom of the crowds” could intervene. Perhaps peace treaties could be negotiated on-line allowing participation of the majority. That is the majority of us who are not so close to the conflict that we cannot see a way out.

planetwork2013commented on Aug 21 2014

From sheer actuality, today Thur 21st Aug ’14, I heard a remarkable proposal by M.T. Keshe, a former iranian nuclear scientist, in his weekly Kesheworkshop on livestream.
When a child has been killed, go with this child to the killer and offer him the child’s organs so that at least a sick child could benefit from this otherwise senseless death. He said that in this way, wars would end quite rapidly.
((At least when the killer is forced to face the killed directly, and not trigger ‘safe’ in a far-away place.))

“The entire human race connected through social networks, and creating a master-mind” – I knew it, I knew it, I just knew it! Among the crowd, the communication-crowd, there are solutions, bring people together, with no limits and there will be results – wow! The missing three pounds were just a little bit lack of people…perhaps the ox himself could have participated a bit?